Fine Gael Leadership Election, 2017

On 16 May 2017, the Taoiseach Enda Kenny put an end to speculation on
his departure from office when he announced his resignation as leader
of Fine Gael at midnight that night. Attention quickly turned to the two
men widely known to have aspirations to the top job: Social Protection
Minister Leo Varadkar (Dublin West) and Housing Minister Simon Coveney
(Cork South Central).

While Varadkar was an early
favourite to win, the speed at which he accumulated the support of the
Fine Gael parliamentary party (TDs, Senators and MEPs) took many by
surprise.

TDs who have declared for Varadkar (click to enlarge)

TDs who have declared for Coveney (click to enlarge)

With
high profile figures such as Tánaiste and Justice Minister Frances
Fitzgerald and Foreign Affairs Minister Charlie Flanagan in his camp, it
looks inevitable that Leo Varadkar will emerge successful, but Minister
Coveney is not throwing in the towel yet.

The
parliamentary party has only a 65% say in who the next leader will be.
The party membership has a 25% say (and mapping their support before the
event is not possible), while Fine Gael councillors have 10% say. While
it appears that the parliamentary party largely fell into line when it
became clear the momentum was with Minister Varadkar, the support of
councillors seems to come down to geography.

Coveney's
support is understandably strongest in Munster - not only is he a Cork
TD, he served as an MEP for Munster from 2004 to 2007. Cork County
Council's Fine Gael members voted unanimously to support him. Limerick
began to sway to the Varadkar camp over the weekend, after the surprise
declaration of its TDs for the Social Protection Minister, who has a
majority of support among the party's Dublin, Leinster, Connacht and
Ulster councillors. Four councils are ties for now, while none of
Roscommon's three Fine Gael councillors have declared for either
candidate yet.

Only five Fine Gael TDs have not declared - it is unlikely that the outgoing Taoiseach Enda Kenny (Mayo), and the party chair Martin Heydon (Kildare South) will declare publicly due to their positions, while outgoing Finance Minister Michael Noonan has been rumoured to be in support of Coveney. That leaves Agriculture Minister Michael Creed (Cork North West) and Bernard Durkan (Kildare North).

The way things stand, it would seem that
Leo Varadkar is destined to become the next party leader and, perhaps,
Taoiseach. But politics can be unpredictable, so let's wait and see...